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A37046 The law unsealed: or, A practical exposition of the Ten Commandments With a resolution of several momentous questions and cases of conscience. By the learned, laborious, faithful servant of Jesus Christ, Mr. James Durham, late minister of the Gospel at Glasgow.; Practical exposition of the X. Commandments. Durham, James, 1622-1658.; Owen, John, 1616-1683.; Jenkyn, William, 1613-1685. 1676 (1676) Wing D2817; ESTC R215306 402,791 322

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practise in plucking ears of Corn and rubbing them as it is Luke 6 1. which was a sort of preparing and dressing of that meat insinuate the contrary neither can any thing be gathered from that place Exod. 16. 23. against dressing of meat simply but rather the contrary for the Manna that remained over what was dressed on the sixth day was to be laid up till the seventh day or the Sabbath but not till the day after the Sabbath and will it not suppose that they behooved then to dress it on the Sabbath as on other dayes by boyling at least for as to grinding of it at Mills or other wayes there was no necessity for that on the Sabbath out of some extraordinary Case or else they had needlesly laid it up and so behoved to have fires to dress it with And therefore that of not dressing meat of not kindling fire c. must be of what is unnecessary and for servile works or making gain in mens ordinary particular callings But to the third way if any should inquire what more holiness is called for o● can be win at on the Sabbath then a Believer is called unto on other dayes he being called to endeavour to be perfectly holy every day I Answer Although he be called to be perfectly holy yet not in the holiness of immediate Worship throughout every day He is to be perfectly holy on other dayes according to the duties and imployments of these dayes but on the Lords day he is called to be holy according to the imployments of that day and its duties The Lords people of old were indeed called to perfect holiness all the week over but singularly to sanctifie the Sabbath as a part of their universal holiness 2. Though all the parts of every day should be spent holily yet some parts more especially as what parts are spent in Prayer reading the Scripture c. and somewhat more is required of these who are called to it on a Fasting day then on other dayes even so on the Sabbath 3. There is a difference betwixt a person living holily in the general and a person who is holy in sanctifying the Lords day though a man should be holy every day yet is he not to sanctifie every day which is required on this day whereof we shall now speak This dayes sanctification then we conceive to consist in these 1. That there is more abstractedness not onely from sinful things but even from lawful temporal things required on that day then on other days a spiritual frame of heart separating and setting apart a man from ordinary thoughts Hence we may say that as the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifyeth unclean as well as common so a common or every day frame o● Spirit will be found unclean for the Sabbath there must therefore be another frame of heart different from an ilk a day-frame and suited to that day 2. This day is to be sanctifyed in respect of the Exercises of it beyond other days and that necessarily whereas on some other dayes we may be taken up in some duties of worship arbitrarily but here necessarily And men may and ought to be holy on other dayes in their plowing and other works but there their Holiness is to be in immediate worship to God in some thing relating to that alway such as praying reading hearing conferring meditating c. 3. The sanctification of this day lyeth in this that it must be wholly sanctified but parts of other dayes are ordinarily used in religious Service but this whole day is to be used so a man should be this whole day throughout as in the time of praying on other dayes 4. Duties would be multiplyed that day more secret and private Prayer Reading c. and more publick Worship even as there were double Sacrifices that day under the Law though there were Sacrifices all dayes 5. There would be in the duties of this day more intenseness of Spirit and a further degree of spiritual affections then in these duties of other dayes because this day is purposely set apart for that end and by continuance in duties we may attain to more of a spiritual frame and because not onely the Exercises of Worship praying reading and hearing c. call to Holiness on this day as they do on other dayes but even the very day it self doth call to it even as on a solemn day of humiliation men ought to be more affected and deeply humbled then on other dayes though daily they should repent and be humbled because that day is solemnly set apart for it so ought our worship to be more intense and solemn this day suitable unto it wherein we are as it were dyeted for insisting and persisting in duties of worship where as these duties in this respect and in comparison are on other days but as starts worship is here some way the only work of that day 6. There would be more heavenliness and spiritual sence breathed after that day in the frame of the heart it would be near God and the work of the day would be delightsome and sweet the Sabbath would as it is Isaiah 58. be called a delight and we would endeavour as it is Heb. 4. to enter into his rest to pass through the outward rest into his to be within his chambers yea even in his arms as it were all that day 7. There would be that day more divineness in our Holiness to speak so a sort of Majesty by ordinary in our walk looking like the Sabbath and like the God of the Sabbath There would be an exulting in God that day we would endeavour to have our hearts in a special manner warm in the Exercise of love to him and to be much in praising of him our Whole worship would more absolutely and immediately be aimed and levelled at the honour and glory of God as the end of it then on other ordinary days wherein our prayers and other pieces of worship may more immediately respect our own Case and need but on this day Gods Honour as the end more immediately whatever our own Case be and that both in heart within and in the nature of our Exercises without this is to call the Sabbath of the Lord honourable to honour and glorifie him therein as it is Is 58. a special Majesty being in that days worship by levealling it with extraordinary singleness at Gods praise even as his name is hallowed or sanctified in Heaven by Angels and perfected Saints Hence It 's good to give thanks unto thy Name c. beginneth that Psalm of Praise for the Sabbath-day to wit the 92. These Duties then that further his praise are more especially for that day 8. All these reach both words and thoughts nothing to the hindrance of these is to be admitted neither there are none of our words and thoughts that day but they would in a special manner be Gods and in it we should be spent as his and endeavour to
be within view of Heaven to make some Essay of glorified Saints exercise there and to have the Sabbath as a little preludy of that everlasting Sabbath and rest in the bosom of God The Fourth way of considering this sanctification is positively to wit as to the Duties wherein the Sabbath is to be spent which are shortly all duties of immediate worship whether they be inward as meditation self-examination heart prayer either ejaculatory or more continued heart-sorrow for sins c. or outward as vocal prayer and singing of Psalms reading the Scriptures and other pious Books hearing the word c. or whether they secret which may be both inward and outward or private in Families as reading of the word conferring on it repeating Sermons praying together c. or publick as joyning with the Congregation in prayers and praises hearing the word read and the sense given hearing of Sermons participating of the Sacraments when dispensed joyning in solemn humiliations and thanks givings when they fall necessarily or more conveniently to be on the Sabbath All which and such like are proper duties for that day to which liberal laying up and giving for the relief of the poor according to ability and as God blesseth every man would be added as a suitable dnty of it though it be no duty of immediate worship The fifth way is to consider the sanctification of the Sabbath complexly before it come when it 's come and after it's past 1. Then the night before not secluding a suitable remembrance throughout the week remember it 1. by timous leaving of worldly business it 's a great incroachment on the Sabbath thought too too usual to continue longer at work the night before then any other night of the week as if folks would gain the day of rest out of Saturnsdays night and Mondays morning 2 By not suffering this little times leaving of work to be idly spent but being taken up with endeavours 1. To abstract mind the 2. To from other works as well as the hand and to have the heart put in a lively frame mind the work of the day which is coming and to have a suitablenss to it If ye ask what suitableness we have to it Answ Endeavour 1. to be as if ye were about to meet God to tryst as if it were visibly with him and solemnly to treat and enter in marriage with him 2. To be like Heaven and in a special manner in some sort to imitate God as if ye were already entered into his rest and had rested from your own works 3. To be as if ye were to dye and to step into Eternity for this resting should mind us of that and was and is still specially appointed though yet no Ceremony to mind us of Gods separating of us from others for himself that we may rest eternally with him Then 3. for furthering of this look back on the Week past and endeavour to have things clear before the Sabbath come and all by-gone quarrels removed that theremay be no standing controversies against you to begin the Sabbath with 4. Pray with special solemn seriousness in reference to that day that ye may have peace for what is past that ye may be in a right frame for the day that the Minister may be helped to speak as it becometh that others may be fitted to heare and joyn that the Word and other Ordinances may be richly blest of God and that the mercy of having the Ordinances may be minded with praise to the gracious giver of them and suitably improved 2. When the morning of that sweet and desirable day cometh after we have fallen asleep in a special manner as it were in the Lords arms the night before and left our selves there 1. we would timely begin the work and beware that either carnal thoughts get in or the time be idly slepped over but I say we would begine the work early for it 's for that end appointed and sinful thoughts will not be kept out but by filling the room otherwayes with what is spiritualy profitably Shew forth Gods loving kindness in the morning saith the Psam for the Sabbath to wit the 92. Let therefore the Meditation of somewhat of these or such like begin with us even when we are making ready 1. somewhat of God himself whose day it is 2. of heaven and that happiness that is there 3. of the works of God who gave us and all the world a being and who only preserveth the same 4. of Christs redemption and as closed and perfected on this day which especially should be minded that so thinking of our many and great obligations and of the misery we had been in had not that work of Redemption intervened we may begin the day with a due impression of Gods greatness and goodness of our own sinfulness weakness and misery and of this blessed remedy and out-gate 2. We would address our selves to solemn prayer in secret and that at greater length then on other dayes and with persisting in inwith special petitions relating to the day with all the seriousnese may win it 3 We would take a view of our own hearts to see how and where we left the night before and endeavour to have clearness betwixt the Lord and us as to our state and otherwayes maintained and renewed if it was or attained if it was not 4. Too much time would not be spent in adorning of busking or folks bodies or in making other provisions for them but as the whole of it would be taken up in duties of worship as we have before shewed so some part of it would be set apart for secret reading yea for secret praising thanksgiving and singing an exercise not unbecoming that day as that fore-cited Psalm for the Sabbath day sheweth 5. If thou be the Head of a Family or livest in fellowship with others then the family is gravely to be brought together and every particular member is to joyn with the rest And here also prayers and other religious duties are to be doubled according to the ceremonial doubling of Sacrifices on the Seventh-day-Sabbath under the Law for in secret in families and in publick there would be more that day then in other dayes 6. Care and inspection would be taken so far as men can reach that by none in the Society neither secret nor private duties be neglected nor publick duties abstained from but that each may stir up one another and more especially those whose places lead them to it to the sutable sanctification of the day in all the duties of it and withal it would be looked to that none of the family be suffered to stay at home unnecessarily from the publick worship or to be absent from the family worship 7. Timely that ye be not by haste discomposed come to publick-modestly apparrelled it's a shame to see how gaudily some come to publick worship on the Lords day grave in your walk wary and circumspect in you words that they
of the Moral Law doth perpetually oblige and tye to worship God and none other and that according to the manner which he prescribes Next unto the Rules already laid down for the better understanding of the Commandments we add two more The first is that the Commandements are so to be expounded as that none of them may contradict another that is there is nothing commanded in one that is forbidden in another or contrary one duty doth not justle with not thrust out another but they differ only and then two duties coming together in that case one of them ceaseth to be a duty for that time as is said in that distinction of affirmative and negative Commands The second Rule is that all these Commandments bind and call for obedience from men according to their places and other qualifications and circumstances The fifth Commandment calleth for one thing from a Magistrate another from a Subject a Magistrate is to edifie one way a Minister another a private Christian another a Servant is one way to reprove his Fellow-servant a Master another way The Law requires more from a man of parts power and riches then from another as to exercise and improvement of these gifts The Law being just has in it a proportionableness to places parts c. and sets bounds to stations but alters them not nor confounds them 3. For the help of your memories and that ye may have these Rules more obvious ye may draw them all under these five Scriptures The first Scripture is Psalm 119. v. 96. Thy Commandment is exceeding broad which though it be more extensive in its meaning yet it doth certainly include this Law which in an especial way is the Commandment and in the sense and comprehensive meaning thereof is exceeding broad for it takes in the fulness and extent of the whole Law in its obligation as to all things persons and duties of all sorts The second Scripture is Rom. 7. 14. which speaks to the Spirituality of the Law in the obedience which it calleth for the Law is Spiritual The third Scripture is Rom. 7. 12. which speaks the perfection of its nature the Law is Just therefore fretting against what it commandeth or wishing it were otherwise is a breach thereof It is holy therefore to be discomformable unto it is to be unholy it 's good and therefore it ought to be loved and delighted in The fourth Scripture is 1 Tim. 1. 5. and it speaketh the great end of the Law The end of the Commandment is Charity out of a pure Heart and a good Conscience and Faith unfeigned which threefold End speaketh out the absolute purity and holiness called for in our love to God and others so as to have a good conscience in this before God all which must flow from unfeigned Faith without presumption resting on Jesus Christ who is in this sense the end of the Law The fifth Scripture is 1 Tim. 1. 8. The Law is good if a man use it lawfully and this guards against abusing of the Law and putteth us to the lawful use of it There are extreams in abusing the Law as 1. When it is used to see Righteousness by it Again 2. When the Authority of it is pretended for something it Warrants not such as the Traditions of the Fathers Matt. 15. seeking of Salvation by the observation of Circumcision c. 3. When its Authority in practise is denyed 4. When it is turned from practise to vain speculations and questions 5. When it is so used as it deters and scares from Christ 6. When it is so made use of as it oppresses and discourages a Believer for whose sake 1 Tim. 1. 19. it was never made or appointed as to its threatnings and condemning Power And lastly in a word when it is not used to the ends and in the manner expressed in the former Scriptures Fourthly Because the study of this Law is so singularly useful we not only press commend it but add further some few directions whereby we may be helped rightly to use it and to guard against the abuse of it in our hearing and reading of it 1. The first direction is ye would look on it as Gods Word and take it as if ye heard himself from Sinai pronounce it that so ye may tremble and be more affected with holy fear when ever ye read hear it or meditate upon it for so was the people affected when it was first promulgate 2. Be much in prayer for grace to take up its meaning David Psal 119. 18 c. prayed often for this and thought it not unbecoming a King yea a believing King and a Prophet to study this Law and pray much for opened eyes to understand the meaning thereof 3. In your reading seek to understand so as to practise it for that is the end of knowledge and the end the Law it self aims at Deuv 5. 1. 2. we knowing no more in Gods account then what we endeavour honestly to practise and not aiming at practise indisposeth both for understanding and practise and makes men exceeding careless 4. As ye hear and learn any thing to be duty or sin reflect on your selves and try whether that be sin in you and how far short ye are in that duty for this is the proper use of the Law to reveal sin and transgression Rom. 1. ●8 and therefore it is ca●●ed a Glass Jam. 1. 23. 24. and ye would look in it so as ye may know what manner of persons ye are and may know what sports are upon you 5. When the Law discovers sin ye would open your Bosom to let in Convictions for the Law entered that sin might abound not in practise but in sense feeling and conscience Rom. 5. 20. and follow these Convictions by repentance till they necessitate you to flye to Christ and leave you there 6. Take help from Christs Sermons and the Prophets to understand this Scripture for they are the only Canonical and therefore the best Commentary upon the Commandments yet ye would not despise the light holden forth in humane writings such as the larger Catechism which is very full as to this and if concionably improved will prove exceeding profitable for your instruction Lastly The Grave Case that we would speak unto before we enter particularly on the Commandments is whether any of these Commandments may be broken in our sleep by Dreams Imaginations Actions c. which otherwise are unlawful or whether when a man is sleeping and dreaming he be subject to the Rule of the Law and if its obligation extend to him even then This question hath its own difficulty and althought it be not good to be curious in it yet it wants not its own profit as to the peace and quietness of Gods people or to their humbling and stirring up unto repentance if it be rightely decided I know almost all run on the negative as if men were not in the least guilty of sin by such Dreams upon this
do not so effect them and yet even these know the reasons that are made use of against the sinfulness of it which maketh me think there is something directly against Conscience and Purity in these sinful actions or motions To conclude sure we are this Opinion is not unsuitable to the end of the Law and that absolute Purity and Angelical Holiness God calleth for in it namely that not only when we are awake we are to be still with him but that our sleep should not break our Communion with him And certainly it is most safe for man to humble himself under the sense of his sinful nature and the sad necessity of sinning both waking and sleeping he hath brought on himself that thereby he may the better press on himself the necessity of a Mediator for Righteousness which are the great ends and uses of the Law We come now more particurarly to the words which the Lord himself spok concerning the number of these Commandments and general scope of them as hath been said there is no question but there be four things we would speak a little to for further clearing of the Text before we come to speak particularly to the first Commandment The first is whether these words I am th● Lord thy God c. be a part of the first Commandment or a Preface to all the Ten Answ We think it is a ground laid down for pressing and drawing forth our obedience to all the Commandments yet it hath relation more especially to the first Commandment as the negative expression there cleareth which is Th●● shalt have no other god● before 〈◊〉 that is no other then Me what Me even Me the Lord thy God that brought thee ●ut of the Land of Egypt So then there is a special relation betwixt this Commandment and the Preface as including the positive part of this negative Commandment and it doth especially clear these three things 1. What is the right object of worship it is Jehova Elohim the Lord that sheweth the Unity of the Divine Essence for so ●●hovah being a word in the singular number is ordinarely look't on as pointing out this then Elo●im which is a word in the plural number speaketh the plurality of Persons in the God head so that the Lord commanding and requiring obedience here is one God and three Persous 2. It cleareth what is the right Channel in which our service should run it is in the Channel of the Covenant our obedience is to be directed not to God abstractly considered but to God as our God I am the Lord thy God saith he and thy God by Covenant so the expression is Deut. 28. 58. That thou m●●st fear this glorious and fearful Name THE LORD THY GOD. This maketh our service and worship sweet and kindly and without this relation there can be no acceptable service performed by sinful man to God and that relation that by the Covenant of Works once stood betwixt them being broken it saith it must be made up again which only can be done in Christ and it saith also that this relation to God in him and obedience to the Law can consist well together 3. It cleareth what is the right and great motive of obedience to wit the benefit of Redemption love and thankfulness upon that account constraining to the performing of these duties that are commanded that they may be done willingly and in a chearful manner Secondly It may be asked why the second Commandment and the fourth Commandment have reasons pressing obedience annexed to them which none of the other hath at least expresly set down by the Lord Answ This may be a reason because all the other Commandments are by the Law of Nature determined in mens Consciences and the sins against them are by Natures Light seen to be evil but the substance of these two to wit what way he will be worshipped in externals and on what day as the solemn time of worship being determined by Gods positive Law they are not so impressed on mens Consciences as the duties required in the other Commandments are therefore the Lord addeth reasons to each of these to perswade to the obedience of them as to the second I am a jealous God and therefore will not admit of any the least appearance of declining from me even in externals and to the fourth keep the Sabbath day for I have put a difference betwixt it and other dayes though before there was none which is further amplified in the Text Now by this reason which is also given by the School-men it may appear that the second Commandment concerning outward worship according to our way of distinguishing them i● distinct from the first which requireth the inward worship due to God for the first Commandment is Moral-Natural and can never be altered and has as much impression on a Natural Conscience as any and therefore according to this ground needed no reason Thirdly It may be observed also that some Commandments have Promises added to them which others have not not that any Commandment wants implied incouragements but in some they are expressed as in the second He sheweth mercy to thousands c. and in the fifth That thy days may be long c. The reason given why Promises are particularly expressed in these two is that obedience to these two seemeth to bring most hurt to men and is most contrary to their corrupt wills and affections it seemeth not so prejucidial nor is it so obnoxious to the hatred of the World that men love God and fear him in their hearts c. as it is outwardly to confess him before men and that by adhering close to the true manner of worshipping him This maketh men obnoxious to persecutions crosses losses c. to be seriously taken up in the externals of godliness sometimes bringeth much prejudice with it and is to many troublesome and so to be obedient to Superiours and tender of Inferiour● is not easily condescended unto therefore God to counterbalance the difficulties that accompany the obedience of these two Commandments hath added Promises to them the more to incourage and stir up to the obedience of them The fourth thing we would take notice of is that some Commandments have threatnings expressed in them which others have not as the second and the third not that any Commandment wanteth implied threatnings but the reason is because men ordinarily count light of the breach of these two Commandments if they be as they think honest at the heart though they be very negligent and careless in many outward things and though in the manner of worship they be very slight and perfunctorious yet if it be to the true God they think the less of it And so also men are given to count very light of reverent using Gods Holy Name therefore he hath put a threatning to both these Commandments to make men know he will not so easily pass them as men oft-times imagine and that all these three
former Hebr. 2. 5. and the redeeming of the one is looked upon as the making of the other therefore from that day forth the day of rest is to be such as may relate to both now the day being changed to the first it remembreth us of Gods rest at the Creation by distinguishing six dayes from the seventh and it remembreth us of the new Creation by putting Christs Resurrection in the room of the former Arg. 2. If the new World be a work as much for the glory of God and as comfortable to men when it s begun and closed or finished by the work of Redemption as the making of the old World was then the day of rest of the new World is to be made to relate to that much more if the Redemption of the World be more for the glory of God and for the comfort of men then by the ground on which the seventh day was at first instituted it s also again to be changed to wit the memory of Gods great work but both the former are true Ergo or thus if the ground that made the seventh to be chosen for the Sabbath in the old World be changed in the new and tha● ground agree better to another then to it then it is to be changed But the ground whereupon the old seventh day was preferred is now changed there are grounds to prefer another day to it for the same ends therefore it is meet the day be changed also Or thus f the perfecting of the work of Redemption and the rest of the Mediator after it be as much to be remembred as the work of Creation and Gods resting after it then the day is to be changed but so it is Ergo. Arg. 3. If by Christ in the new World all the Levitical services be changed and the Ceremonial Worship of that day then it is meet that the day also should be changed 1. For shewing the expiration of that Worship and Law it being hard to keep that day and to distinguish it from the Jewish former Worship 2. To keep Christians more Judaizing and to abstract them even from former services of the Sabbath now abolished just as now no particular family hath the Priesthood as Levi had it before nor no particular Nation hath the Church confined in it as that of the Jews had though these were not typical properly yea it would be such a day as would point out the evanishing of former Ceremonies which the inbringing of the first day abundantly doth Arg. 4. If the Worship and Ordinances of the new Gospel-world be eminently to hold their Institution of Christ the Mediator and to be made some way relative to his Redemption past then it is meet for that end that the Sabbath-day be changed so as it may be dependant on him as all other worship is that is moral-positive or positive-moral and that cannot be done well if the former day be kept unchanged at least not so well as when it is changed but the former is true all Gospel-worship holdeth of him Sacraments Prayer Praise Ministry c. now Sacraments as they seal are not ceremonial for the Tree of Life was instituted to be a seal of the Covenant of works in the state of Innocency before the fall while there were no typical Institutions of a Saviour to come and so Sacraments as they are Seals may be continued as perpetual pieces of worship without hazard of typifying a Saviour to come therefore he instituted new ones and that with relation to his work of Redemption considered as past Hence also his Prayer or Pattern is called the Lords Prayer and his Sacrament of the Supper is called the Lords Supper because instituted by him and relating to him in this sence it is peculiarly said Hebr. 2. 5. That God put in subjection to him the World to come different from what was before and he is put as the Son in the New Testament in the place of Moses who was the Law-giver and faithful Servant in the Old Heb. 3. upon this ground we think that day is called Hebr. 1. 10. the Lords day to bring it in a dependance on Jesus Christ and to make it respect what is past of the work of Redemption Arg. 5. If the day of solemn publick worship be a piece of Gods worship capable of bearing a relation to Christ to come and falling out under the Mediators Kingdom properly then when he cometh in the new World it is meet it should be changed 1. To shew he is come 2. To shew he is absolute over the house and worship of God 3. Some way to preach his Grace and Redemption in the very change of it But it is a piece of Worship and Tribute of our time as is said before and a piece of worship capable of his Institution and Remembrance therefore called the Lords day which could not be were not a day of worship capable of that and it falleth under the power of Christ who Matth. 12. Even as the Son of Man is Lord of the Sabbath and why is that power pleaded in that particular of the day so often if it were not to shew that there is reason by his coming to look on the Sabbath as under him even as all other worship was which stood by Gods positive Command even as this did Arg. 6. If by this Command the day of rest from Gods most solemn work be to be our day of rest then after Christs coming not so before not the seventh but the first day is to be observed but by the command the former is true Again if that day be to be kept in reference to any solemn work of God which was the first day after his perfecting it then the First day is to be kept but by the command the former is true because our resting day is to be kept in reference to the work of Redemption and therefore must be on the First day which was the day after its closing and perfecting as to Christs suffering and labour though not as to its application even as the seventh was of Gods resting from the work of Creation though not from his works of Providence Arg. 7. If the seventh day which the Jews kept had any peculiar tye or motive unto them which by Christ is now taken away then it was meet that at Christs coming that day should be changed We would understand here that there might be somewhat peculiar or typical in their seventh day and yet nothing so in the fourth Command which commandeth one of seven but not the seventh And though we could not particularly pitch upon what is typical or peculiar in it yet may we conceive that something there is as in Tythes Offerings c. though the particular thing which is typified be hardly instructed As 1. If its beginning was on the evening to them as some think the reason of it was peculiar to wit their coming out of Egypt at evening Exod. 12. And in so far
condemned but only such as are in consistent with the end and scope of this Command as by other Scriptures and the practise of Christ and the Saints is clear we conceive therefore these to be permitted 1. All duties of Piety as was sacrificing under the Old Testament or preaching hearing or going about the Sacraments under the New Testament In which sense Matth. 12 our Lord saith the Priests prophaned the Sabbath and were blameless not that formally they prophaned the Sabbath or did indeed break that Command but materially they wrought in killing beasts c. which had been unlawful had it not been in the exercises of piety 2. All things that have a tendency as necessary helps and means to the performance of the former works of piety are lawful as going to the Congregation to hear the Law calling the Assembly for worship by Trumpets or Bells or by a Voice journeying going or riding to Church c. because the duties of the Sabbath cannot well be done without some of these not at all without others of them If it should be asked here What that which is called a Sabbaths day journey Acts 1. 12. was among the Jews and whence it came and what way may it be stinted or limited among Christians Answ It was to them 2000. Cubits which according to the different measuring of that distance of ground consisting of these 2000 Cubits by a lesser or longer Cubit is reckoned to be more or less by learned Men but all agree says Goodwin in his Moses and Aaron in this that these 2000. Cubits was a Sabbath days journey It arose to be reckoned so from these grounds 1. From their expounding Exod. 16. 29. Let none go out of his place thus Let none go without the bounds of the City which with its Suburbs was 2000. Cubits or a mile about 2. That the Tabernacle of the Congregation was so far from the Tents of these who pitched about it in the Wilderness Numb 2. as they supposed and that the Priests kept that distance from the people in entering with the Ark into Iordan Jos 3. 4. whence they gathered that a man might still go to the Ark or place of worship as it was then in these cases at a distance from them and no further on the Sabbath day But we say whatever superstitiously or on custome they took up for that is but their Tradition we cannot stint a Sabbath dayes journey to so many miles fewer or more but it must be as the man is in providence cast to reside further from or nearer to the place where the Ordinances are dispensed for one may go many miles and not prophane the Sabbath if he cannot have the publick Ordinances nearer whereas another may break the Sabbath by going but to his Neighbours door yea by walking in his own house or to his door if either it be done idly or with respect to another civil or worldly end which agreeth not to that day it is not here remoteness or nearness but what sweyeth us and what is our end that we are to try by 3. All works of mercy are lawful on that day as laying beside us something to the poor 1 Corinth 16. verse 1. sending or dealing something to those who are in want Isai 58. verse 7. visiting others to comfort strengthen or otherwayes to edifie them christianly though idle and carnal visits albeit alace too rife are not permitted 4. Good Works as Christ saith Matth. 12. 12. It s lawful to do good or well on the Sabbath such are giving of Physick when it is necessary bringing of Physitians saving a mans life and taking pains for it c. Luke 13. these good Works may be classed either with Works of mercy before or with Works of necessity that follow both being good Works as they are Works of mercy or of necessity 5 Works of necessity such as feeding Beasts leading them to the water pulling them out of Ditches when they are fallen into them on that day and much more preparing honestly sober allowance for the susteining of the body as the Disciples pluckt the ears of Corn Matth. 12. and the Jews Exod. 16. 23. dressed the Manna on the Sabbath though they were not to gather it yet on the sixth day to bake and seethe a part and to keep a part till the morrow but not till the day following and therefore they behoved to dress it also yea Jesus Christ went himself to a Feast on the Sabbath Luke 14. that he might take that opportunity by his spiritual discourse to edifie the Company as he did notably which he would not have done had it been unlawful to dress any meat on the Sabbath yet his carriage was such at that Feast most remarkably that it would be followed as a pattern by such as may be invited by others to eat with them and shall be disposed to go on the Sabbath And if this were the design of the inviters and invited mens eating together on that day would not readily prejudice the sanctification of it as very often it doth Such is flying on the Lords day from a destroying enemy and in other warranted cases Matth. 24. defending our selves against unjust violence c 6. Works of comliness tending to honest or decent walking as putting on of clothes honestly making the house clean from any uncleanness that may fall in it throughout the Sabbath c. By all which Believers have allowance 1. for piety 2. for charity 3. for what is needful for their beasts 4. what is needful and convenient or comely for themselves and more is not necessary In these the Lord hath not streightned them neither hath he pinched and pinned them up to absolute necessity but hath left them to walk by Christian prudence yet so as they may not exceed for the Disciples possibly might have endured that hunger and not pluckt the ears of Corn or beasts may live a day without water and not be much the worse or some sort of Victuals may be provided to be set beside men on the Sabbath needing no dressing or preparing yea a man may live on little or nothing for one day but the Lord hath thought good not to streighten them so as to make his day and worship a weariness and burden unto them seeing he hath made the Sabbath for man to be refreshing to him and not man for the Sabbath nor will he have their Consciences to be fettered with inextricable scruples He leaveth it to men on other days how much to eat and drink by a Christian prudence yet alloweth them not to exceed even on these so here there is some latitude left to conscientious reason to walk by for some may do something at one time and not at another yea one man may take more pains in upholding his body then is called for from another who is stronger so that its impossible to set particular rules which will agree to all but men would look 1. to their end 2.
143 Fasting in what sense a part of Gods worship 69 Se●eral grounds of fasting ibid. Twelve ordinary sins that goes before fasting 70 71 Twenty ordinary sins in fasting ennumerat●d 71 72 Thirteen Instances of ordinary failings after fasting 72 Father how to be understood in the fifth command 191 Wh●● Lo●e the Father owes to the Son and what the Son to the Father 104 Whether the Father or the Magistrate should be obeyed when commanding contrary things ib. Fornication the several sorts of it with its aggravations 217 Frugality what it is Eight Characters of it 255 G. GAin when lawful and honest 250 251 Several wayes of dishonest gain ●nnum●rated 241 G●ds Who make unto themselves other Gods beside the Lord. 26 Gluttony how against the 7 Command 226 Divers considerations tending to discover when we sin in eating 227. to 229. Diver's necessary Rules for r●gul●ting our eating and drinking 22● H. HAtred of God how a breach of the first Command 3● H●● every sin is interpreted h●●red and every ●●en●r a hatred of God 75. 76 How ●orrupting of Gods worship is reckoned hatred of God in a special manner 76 Hair how sinfully abused 223 Honour what mentioned in the fifth Commandment imports 192 193 Why Honouring our neighbour is commanded before other duti●s of the second table 197 Wh●r●in honouring our neig●bour c●nsists and what it imports ibid. H●w honour differeth from love ibid. Whether outward expressions of honour be alwayes necessary ibid. What is centrary to this ●●nour we owe to our neighbour 198. 199 Whether wicked men may be honoured 199. 200 Whether rich men f●ould be honoured 200 The place Jam ● 1 2. explained ibid. How the honour we owe in a good man differs from that we owe to others alike in outward respects ibid. Whether we may seek our own honour and how 201 How we should prefer another to our selves 201. 202 Humility required by the fifth Command a threefold Consideration of it How the Pagan moralists were strangers to it The advantages of it In what things its most necessary The opposites of it 205. to 208 I. IDleness the sinfulness of it 181 182 Idolatry 7. distinctions of it 19 20 Five wayes of more subtile heart idolatry 20 How to discover each of these 20 21 The ordinary objects of this great idolatry Instanced in 11. particulars 22 What be the most subtile Idols shewed in six particulars 24 A Twofold Idolatry especially forbidden to the Israelites and condemned in them 34 The Idolatry forbidden in the second command in six particulars 43. 44 Jealousie what it importeth and how attributed to God 72 73 Ignorance of the Law The sad effects of it 1. 2 How a breach of the first Command 28 Several distinctions of it explained ibid. How it ex●useth and how not 29 Images of any of the 3 Persons in the bl●ssed Trini●● proved to be unlawful 35 Objections answered 35 ●6 The Command forbidding Images proved to be distinct from the first 34 What Images may be ●awfully made ibid. When are Images of creatures abused 36 Images of Heathen Gods as M●rs Cupid c. prohibited 37 Impatience ●ow it appears and how a breach of the first Command 31 Imprecations whether lawful or not 83 Incest when committed and wherein the unnaturalness of it stands 216 K. KNowledge of God required in the first Command 18. See ignorance L. LAw the excellency and usefulness of it 1 How the moral Law obligeth ●s now 2 The distinction of the decalogue as a Law and as a Covenant cleared 4 How the Law was given to Adam in innocency how to Israel and how is Believers now 10 The extent of the Law shewed in seven respects 9 Several wayes of abusing the Law 11 Some directions for right using of it ibid. Like-makes and dr●gies the sinfulness of them 47 Lots or Lotting defined 106 How the use of them concerns the third Command 107 Several divisions of Lots and which of them are lawful which not 107. 108 What is necessary to lawful Lotting 1 8 Cautions for preventing abuse of them 108 109 Lusory Lots proved unlawful 109 110 111 Some objection an wered ibid. Love to God why called the first and great commandment 188 What Love may be allowed to the Creature without breath of the first Command 25 Whether we ought to Love all man alike 194 In what respects may we make a difference ibid. What are the grounds of a lawful difference in our Love 195 How Love to the Godly differeth from common Love to others ibid. How we may love wicked men ibid. What self love is lawful what not 196 Lust how early it entred into the world 214 Several degrees of unnatural Lusts 216 See Concupiscence Lye what it is and when one is guilty of it 263 Four sorts of Lyes 264 How many wayes we wrong our neighbour by Lying 264. 265 Of Lying in Court of Justice how the Judge and how the Advocate may be guilty as well ●s a false witness 267 Life the taking away of our own cleared to be forbidden in the sixth Command 209 How many wayes one may be guilty of this ibid. How we may sin against the bodily Life of others 210 How against the Life of their souls 210 211 How against their Life of contentment 211 M. MArriage how many wayes men sin in Contracting of it 218 How one may sin against the seventh Command even in a Married state ibid. How one may sin in dissolving of Marriage 218 219 Mother vvhy mentioned in the first Command 192 Moral all the precepts in the decalogue not moral in the same sense 5 See Sabbath Murther several distinctions of it 212 How its committed in the heart how i● words gestures deeds 212 213 How Magistrates may be guilty of it ibid. Self Murder how forbidden 109 See Life N. NAme what is meant by the Name of God 77 What it is to take this Name in vain 78 What is necessary to the reverent mentioning of the Name of God ibid. Why the taking of this Name in vain is so peremptorily prohibited 79 Eight ordinary wayes of taking the Lords Name in vain 102. 103 How the Name of God is taken in vain in ordinances and duties 103 How to prevent this sin in duties 104 How ●o● know vvhen guilty of it 104 106 Why the taking of God Name in vain i● so threatened and punished even beyond other sins 115. 116 How it comes that this sin is so ordinary 116 117 Directions for the prevention of it ibid. Neighbour to be honoured and loved 191 How vve should love and honour our neighbour 193. 194 See honour and love O. OAth five things to be considered in it 80 How one Oath differs from an asseveration 81 That its unlawful to swear by Angels Saints or other Creatures proved ibid. The difference between promissory and assertory Oaths and between promissory Oaths and Vows shewed 83 84 A threefold matter of an Oath and a threefold occasion of swearing ibid. Of expresse
or tacite conditions in all promissory Oaths 84 W● ther indefinite Oaths such as these imposed in Colledges in Corporations or such as Souldiers take to their Officers be lawful 85 What does not lose the Obligation of promissory Oaths 13. particulars instanced 87. 88 What Oaths are null and of no force 88 Four cases vvherein the Obligation of a lawfull Oath ceaseth 89 Why vvicked men keep their sinful Oaths much more strictly then they do lawful Oaths ibid. What an Oath super addeth to a promise ibid. Obedience The difference between obedience to the moral Law as it respects the Covenant of grace and as it respects the Covenant of vvorks 3 See Duties Command Law Omens and observations vvhen sinful and superstitious 112 How superstitious Observations may be made of a Word of Scripture 113 Oppression shewed to be a sort of rapine and against the 8. command 230 Obtestations vvhen lawful and binding and how vve may also sin in them 90 91 P. PErjury several sorts of it and several vvayes how one may become perjured 85 Whether one that necessitates another to swear vvhen he has a suspicion that other vvill forswear himself become Acessory to his perjury 86 See Oath Poligamy how a breach of the seventh Command 201 Poverty how men sinfully bring it upon themselves and so violate the eighth Command 247 Punishment of the iniquities of the Fathers upon the Children threatned in the second Command proved to mean spiritual and eternal punishment especially 73 74 Three considerations for clearing how the Lord does th●s punish Children for the Parents sin 75. Five ends for which the Lord threatens the Posterity of vvicked men ibid. How children become guilty of the Parents sin and vvhat special need some have to repent of the sins of their ancestors 76 Praising of God required in the 2. Command 53 Our ordinary failings before the going about this duty ibid. Many failings in the performances of this duty enumerated 53 54 Our failings after praising 54 Prayer required by the second Commandment 50 Many sins before Prayer instanced 51 Many ordinary sins in Prayer ibid. Many sins while joyning with others in Prayer enumerated 52 Many ordinary sins after Prayer instanced in 52 Preface I am the Lord thy God a preface to all the Commandments but more especially to the first command 16 Pride in what things it appear 107 ●08 See Humility Promises vvhy annexed to some Commandments rather then to others 17 Why the fifth Command is called the first Command with Promise 191 What comfort the Promise made in the second Command to the thousand generations c. affords to believing Parents and their children 76 What is the meaning of the Promise annexed to the 5 Commandment and how to be understood 202 What Advantage a Believer under the New Testament ●as by such temporal Promises 203 See Vows R. RApine what it is 239 Religion how concerned in the duties we o● to others 190 Riches ten prejudices that come by them 25● Right vvhether a vvicked men has it to any thing here 202 203 S. SAbbath the observation of it a moral duty 119 120 Three considerations for clearing the morality of it 120 The morality of it proved from the Scriptures way of speaking of it in general 121 The Prophesies Ezekiel 43. 44 45 46. chap. Considered 122 123 Matth. 24. 20. considered 123 2. Proved that all the 10. Commandments are moral and consequently this 124 This cleared from Matth. 5. 19. Jam. 2. 10. 124 125 3. Several peculiar remarks upon the fourth Commandment confirming the morality of it 127 128 4. Four Arguments drawn from Scripture to prove this 128 129 Four notable Witnesses to this truth 129 130 Objections answered 130 131 Remembring of the Sabbath imports four things 144 145 How to reckon when the Sabbath begins and ends 145 146 What proportion of it should be bestowed on spiritual duties 146 Several Considerations tending to clear that the fourth Commandment intended not the seventh but a seventh day primarily 147 148 Six Arguments for Evincing this 148 to 151 Some objections answered 152 Several Considerations for clearing when the Sabbath begins 152 153 Divers arguments to prove that the Sabbath begins in the morning and continues till next morning 152. to 155. 1. That the Sabbath may be changed from the seventh day to the first proved not deregatory from the 4 Commandment 155 156 2. That it was convenient that the day should be changed proved ●56 3. That the change should be to the first day of the work proved most convenient 159 4. That the seventh-day Sabbath was actually changed to the first day proved 160 to 166 5. That this change is not by Humane but Divine Institution proved 166. to 168 6. That this change was made by Christ from the very day of his Resurrection proved to be probable 168 How the Lord did sanctifie the Sabbath and we ●ought to sanctifie it 169 What works are lawful ●n the Lords day 169 170 Eighth Caveats for preventing the Abuse of what liberty God allows on that day 171 172 What is meant by a Sabbath days journey 170 What resting on the Sabbath imports and from what we must rest 173 174 That we are equally oblidged to the sanctification of the Sabbath as they were of old 174. 175 An Objection answered 175 Wherein the peculiar holiness required on the Lords day consists 176 177 What preparation is necessary for the Sabbath 178 Particular directions for sanctifying the Lords day from morning to evening 178 179 What 's to he done vvhen the Sabbath is over 180 How the Lord Blesses the Sabbath 183 184 Why he has yet apart a day to himself 184 How Magistrates are by the letter of the fourth Commandment oblidged to take care that the Sabbath 〈…〉 all that are under them 182 183 Six aggravations of the sin of Sabbath breaking 185 In what sense Sabbath breaking i● a greater sin then the breath of any command in the second table 186 Several vvayes vvhereby ●●e Sabbath is prophaned 186 187 Some directions for preventing this sin 187 Sacraments the right administration of them required in the second Command 55 Eighth observations concerning the Sacraments in general 55 56 Five ends and uses of the Sacraments 56 57 58 How the Sacraments seal the proposition of a practical Syllogisme how the assumption and how the conclusion 57 How we sin by saying too much weight on the Sacraments 〈◊〉 several failings instanced in 59 How vve sin undervaluing of them seventeen vvayes ennumerated 60 61 How vve sin in not receiving the Lords-Supper 62 Many ordinary sailings before the participation of this ordinance ennumerated 63 Many sins on the receiving of the Lords-Supper instanced 64 Many sins after partaking of this ordinance instanced 65 Whether the admission of scandalous persons does pollute the ordinance 65 to 69 Sins forbidden in the first Command 19. 25 26 How vve may find out the sins against the first Command 27 Sins forbidden